Dennis Lee Bieber wrote: > On Sun, 2 Dec 2018 12:40:44 -0500, songbird <songb...@anthive.com> > declaimed the following: >
>> as references those are useful, but howabout >>something a bit more conceptual or design oriented? >> > > At that level, you are not looking for "Python" books but rather > software engineering texts -- which should provide concepts you then map > into the language being used. ... but i am... ... > has OOP features -- you don't have to code your own dispatching logic. The > current favored notation for OOAD modeling is UML, so a book on UML might > be useful: > > Beginning UML 2.0 (O'Reilly) > UML Distilled (Addison-Wesley) > Using UML (Addison-Wesley) > > These are somewhat old and may have newer texts available. It's been > some 5+ years since I bought any books of this class; my more recent books > have been microprocessor subjects (Arduino, R-Pi, Beaglebone, PIC and ARM > Cortex M-series) ... thanks, i'll look at UML, not sure i want to learn yet another language on top of python. my goal in learning python was to use it as a way of picking up OOP concepts in a more concrete way (theory alone doesn't give me enough hands on the bits i need so i tend to just do other things instead). now that i've used python for a starting project and have that project mostly working i want to step back and work on the OOP aspects. songbird -- https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list